Catholic Church in Algeria
Template:Short description Template:Infobox Christian denomination Template:Catholic Church by country Template:Culture of region The Catholic Church in Algeria is part of the worldwide Catholic Church, under the spiritual leadership of the pope in Rome. Prior to independence, the European Catholic settlers had historic legacy and powerful presence,[1] but today Catholics constitute only a small minority.
History
Antiquity
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Christianity was introduced to Algeria around the 2nd century AD. The popularity of Christianity after the edict of Milan is nowhere else as visible as in North Africa where many huge baptistries were built to facilitate the spread of the religion in the fourth century.Template:Sfn At the same time, the Donatist heresy spread in Roman Africa, also enticing many who had grievances with the Roman state, until it was condemned by a commission in 313 AD.Template:Sfn Nevertheless, Donatism persisted until the beginning of the fifth century when Augustine of Hippo turned the tide in favour of the Church of Rome.Template:Sfn
When the Vandals conquered North Africa in the fifth century, their ruler Gaiseric began a full-scale persecution of Catholic Romans and Africans, banning all Catholic worship, seizing Catholic churches and targeting especially Catholic bishops, priests and deacons. While many were murdered or tortured, also lay people were massacred.Template:Sfn After the reconquest by the Eastern Roman Empire, the Catholic faith was reintroduced. By the mid-seventh century, the majority of North Africa's population had been Christian for a long time, though it was far from homogenous and some remote autochthonous tribes remained pagan. The majority of Christians in the cities and towns was Catholic as were most bishops and clergy.Template:Sfn Few Monotheletes existed and in 646 metropolitans in Mauretania, Numidia and Byzaca reportedly held synods which rejected Monotheletic doctrine and reported it to Pope Theodore I.Template:Sfn
Medieval period
After the Muslim conquest of North Africa, indigenous Christian communities did not vanish immediately but disappeared in the eleventh and twelfth as part of a long and slow process.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This growing weakness can be seen in the greater need of the North African church to look to Rome for help, especially as the shrinking communities and clergy meant that fewer bishops could settle disputes or consecrate new clergy.Template:Sfn As such, Pope Gregory VII corresponded in 1076 both with the Catholic community of Bougie as well as with its ruler, Emir al-Nasir, who had written to Gregory, presenting him with gifts and asking him to ordain a certain Servandus as bishop.Template:Sfn
A new chapter for the North African church begun in the thirteenth century when newcomers from Europe took up residence in the larger coastal towns. These included Christian captives, merchants as well as mercenaries hired by local Muslim rulers.Template:Sfn In order to provide for their spiritual needs and administer rites, various orders such as the Trinitarians, Dominicans and Franciscans sent missions to North Africa with the aid of the popes.Template:Sfn
Colonial period
A new era begun for the Church with the arrival of French forces in 1830, in which many settlers from France, Spain, Italy and Malta came to Algeria.Template:Sfn After some early conflict about the application of the concordat between France and the Holy See and the right to appoint priests to Algeria, a papal bull announcing the creation of the diocese of Algiers resolved these issues tentatively in 1838. The new diocese was dependent on the Archdiocese of Aix-en-Provence and was under the authority of the concordate. The first bishop, Antoine-Adolphe Dupuch, arrived in Algiers with the relics of St. Augustine for which he commissioned a basilica to be built in the ruins of Hippo.Template:Sfn
Cardinal Lavigerie founded the White Fathers in an effort to spread Christianity among the Muslims while intending to understand and respect the native culture. Charles de Foucauld, a hermit whose life and teaching inspired the foundation of many spiritual congregations, also encouraged the respect for the native religion and culture.Template:Sfn
Prior to independence, Algeria was home to a million Catholic settlers (10%) who had a historic legacy and powerful presence.[1] Some Algerians of Berber (mostly Kabyle) or Arab descent converted to Christianity during the French colonialism.[1][2]
After Algerian independence
Shortly after independence, some 900,000 European settlers departed, together with most of the native Christians of Algerian and Muslim origin. After a series of violence events over 1962 more than 80% of Catholic settlers left the country.[1] In the following years, the Church handed over 700 churches (which subsequently became mosques) and in 1976, the Church had to also hand over schools, hospitals and other social services as part of a nationalization program.Template:Sfn After 1993, the assassination of foreign workers and the closure of all foreign schools meant that almost all Christian families left, including European spouses of Algerians, Coptic coopérants (Christian aid workers) and more native Algerian Christians.Template:Sfn After the emigration and violence only about three thousand Catholics remained.Template:Sfn
21st century
In 2020, Catholics made up 0.01-0.02% of the country's population;[3][4]there were 62 priests and 116 nuns serving across 30 parishes.
In 2022, the Catholic Church noted that they were able to carry out religious services and prison visits without interference from the authorities.[5]
Jurisdictions
The country is divided into four Latin dioceses, including one archdiocese with two suffragan dioceses and one exempt diocese (i.e., immediately subject to the Holy See).
Ecclesiastical province of Alger
Exempt diocese
- Diocese of Laghouat (Immediately subject to the Holy See)
During French colonial rule, the Catholic population of Algeria peaked at over one million, but most of these left following Algeria's independence in 1962. There were about 45,000 Catholics residing in the country in the 1980s.[6]
See also
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- List of Catholic dioceses in Algeria, including former jurisdictions, notably many titular sees
- List of Catholic churches in Algeria
- List of Saints from Africa
- List of Christian saints of Algeria
- Religion in Algeria
- Christianity in Algeria
References
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- ↑ a b c d Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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- ↑ The ARDA website, retrieved 2023-08-28
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- ↑ US State Dept 2022 report US State Dept 2022 report
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Sources and external links
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- Official Website of the Catholic Church in Algeria
- Statistics relating to the Catholic Church in Algeria
- GCatholic.org.
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